Deccan Chronicle

Communalis­ing politics before polls in Gujarat

To nip any societal disharmony in the wider interests of the country is clearly not the ruling party’s agenda despite the slogan of ‘sabka saath, sabka vikas’ promoted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi

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Not long after the Yogi Adityanath government in Uttar Pradesh removed the Taj Mahal from the list of attraction­s in its official booklet on tourism in the state, a UP BJP MLA, who is an accused in the Muzaffarna­gar riots case, said at a Sunday rally that the monument built by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan was a “blot” on Indian “culture”, and spoke of the history of the Muslim period as “kalank katha”, or a black chapter. But it’s not Sangeet Som’s understand­ing of the past or his ideas on the notion of “culture” that should bother us. In the backdrop of the hectic election campaign in Himachal Pradesh and Gujarat, it has the potential for communal mobilisati­on of Hindu votes, and causing a schism in society, through remarks like Mr Som’s, that is of real concern. Communal politics and communal history demonise “the other” — in this case India’s Muslims. This is amply reflected in the MLA’s odious remark and its subsequent elaboratio­n. An implied defence by a BJP spokesman should be a matter of worry. The spokesman said the Muslim rule in India was “barbaric” and “a period of incomparab­le intoleranc­e” even as he maintained — to make matters worse — that his party had no views on specific monuments and its members were free to hold whatever opinion they liked.

If this was the official stance of the country’s ruling party, publicly articulate­d, it is evident that what’s not on the mind of the BJP is national integratio­n. The ruling party’s agenda does not appear to nip any societal disharmony in the wider interests of the country despite Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s slogan of “sabka saath, sabka vikas”. In these circumstan­ces, that slogan appears to serve more as a smokescree­n.

The BJP has ruled Gujarat for 22 years. Yet, sensing the acuteness of the electoral challenge that it is confronted with for the Assembly polls due in December, the saffron party isn’t content to seek the popular mandate on the strength of its government’s performanc­e, and is keen to take out an insurance policy by stoking communal politics. This is the meaning of despatchin­g the ace communalis­t UP CM to Gujarat for the campaign.

This sharpening of the communal divide has gone alongside raising the vacuous issue of Gujarat’s pride (imagined wrongs done to eminent Gujaratis such as Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel, Morarji Desai and former Congress CM Madhavsinh Solanki) by Prime Minister Modi himself in a campaign speech on Monday, and pandering to the electorate at the last minute by distributi­ng freebies, thanks to the enlarged time window opened by the Election Commission.

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